April 24, 2011

On Good Friday in Rome: Muslims Illegally Pray at 'Alter of the Homeland'

Like Pamela Geller quips in her post, imagine if Christians tried this in Mecca. And indeed, what makes this especially galling is how much respect Muslims demand for their belligerence, contempt and violence, albeit it's what we've come to expect from their Islamic supremacism:

Those illegal Muslim prayers took place on the Piazza Venezia, in front of the national monument dedicated to Vittorio-Emanuele II, and, more precisely, in front of the "Altar to the homeland"

Therefore, those prayers were a declaration of war to the Italian homeland.

Moreover, this Friday, April 22nd, was the Good Friday : therefore, those prayers were a declaration of war to all the Christians too.

Simply put, these Muslim pigs went there for the sole purpose of pushing Islamic supremacism ... thereby spitting in the face of the Italian culture and Christianity as a whole. It wasn't because they had no where else to pray.

Posted by Richard at April 24, 2011 5:01 PM

On Good Friday in Rome: Muslims Illegally Pray at 'Alter of the Homeland'

Like Pamela Geller quips in her post, imagine if Christians tried this in Mecca. And indeed, what makes this especially galling is how much respect Muslims demand for their belligerence, contempt and violence, albeit it's what we've come to expect from their Islamic supremacism:\n\n

Video description:\n\nDeclaration de guerre - Prires musulmanes en plein Rome (22 avril 2011)\n\nThose illegal Muslim prayers took place on the Piazza Venezia, in front of the national monument dedicated to Vittorio-Emanuele II, and, more precisely, in front of the \"Altar to the homeland\"\n\nTherefore, those prayers were a declaration of war to the Italian homeland.\n\nMoreover, this Friday, April 22nd, was the Good Friday : therefore, those prayers were a declaration of war to all the Christians too.

Simply put, these Muslim pigs went there for the sole purpose of pushing Islamic supremacism ... thereby spitting in the face of the Italian culture and Christianity as a whole. It wasn't because they had no where else to pray.\n